Walnuts aren’t just a good snack – they should become part of your anti-cancer diet. Researchers now think that having two ounces of walnuts every day may reduce your risk of developing breast cancer. But walnuts have even more health benefits to tempt you.

Walnuts Pack a Nutritional Wallop
Dr. Elaine Hardman, at the Marshall University School of Medicine has studied walnuts for 15 years. Dr. Hardman says that walnuts contain at least three nutrients that account for their anti-cancer activity. Omega-3 fatty acids, antioxidants, and phytosterols appear to be the most important components of the walnut’s anti-cancer arsenal. Walnuts also contain other healthy nutrients such as natural melatonin, dietary fiber, and plant protein.
Omega-3s and Breast Cancer
While doing a lab study on mice with breast tumors, Dr. Hardman found that when the mice ate walnuts as part of their daily diet, the mice were less likely to develop breast tumors, and those that did had smaller, slower-growing tumors. Even though omega-3 fatty acids are known to have great effects on tumor growth, she thinks that omega-3s can’t be isolated from walnuts, and have the same powerful effect. “It’s probably different components working together to provide the benefit,” said Dr. Hardman.
Roasted, Toasted, or Raw?
While we often eat walnuts that are roasted, Dr. Hardman worked with raw walnuts. So what about those walnuts that you put in your brownies? Does cooking walnuts decrease their health benefits? Dr. Hardman speculated, “My best guess is that light toasting is okay, this would not be long enough to break down the fat and change the benefit compared to what I did. As for longer cooking, I just don’t know – it is possible that some of the components would be even more effective after cooking (for example, the lycopene in tomato is more active after cooking than in a raw tomato) or they could be degraded, or no difference. That is another study.”
Don’t Deconstruct Your Walnuts
So although walnut oil might be good for you when added to salad dressing or baked goods, the oil alone would not be sufficient to prevent or fight breast cancer. During the research study, the walnut oil by itself was not tested. However, Dr Hardman says that, “The oil would contain the omega-3 fat and lipid soluble components but would be missing other components that would be retained in the pulp.” She doesn’t recommend taking nutritional supplements instead of eating the natural foods. “When we start trying to take the foods apart, we rarely see the kind of [cancer-preventative] effect we get from a whole food.”

Fats, Inflammation, and Cancer
Not all dietary fats are the same – some are even good for you. The omega-3 fatty acids in walnuts, fish, soy, and flaxseed can reduce your LDL cholesterol levels, lower your blood pressure, and reduce inflammation. Research about inflammation and cancer incidence is ongoing, but it appears that inflammation can influence the development of cancer. Preventing or reducing inflammation may suppress cancer growth. Omega-6 fatty acids can increase inflammation and cell proliferation, if consumed habitually in excessive amounts. Omega-6s occur in vegetable oils, meats and eggs – all too common in Western diets. Both types of fatty acids are essential for good health, but should be kept in balance.

Walnuts Are Part of Your Anticancer Action Plan
“Epidemiology data indicates that a healthy diet based on fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts and fish and containing little red meat or added fat would help lower the risk for many types of cancer including breast cancer,” Dr. Hardman reminds us. How much of an impact does a healthy diet have? “30 to 70 percent of cancers are probably preventable with lifestyle changes,” says Dr. Hardman, although experts vary in their opinions. To get the best anticancer action plan going for your life, eat a healthy diet, avoid tobacco and alcohol, do regular exercise, maintain a healthy weight, don’t skip your annual mammogram, and remember to do your monthly breast self-exam.

Breast Cancer Prevention May Be In a Nutshell, Says Dr. Elaine Hardman
By Pam Stephan, About.com Guide

Provided by: http://breastcancer.about.com

Beyond busy? Try this fast, total-body routine from Keli Roberts, a master trainer in Pasadena and star of the TimeSavers video workout series.

1. Clean and Press
Minute: 0:00-1:00
Targets shoulders, back, butt, legs
a. Stand with feet shoulder-width apart and place a 5-pound dumbbell on the floor near each foot. Squat, bringing the dumbbells to the outside of your knees, palms down.
b. Stand, bringing the dumbbells to your hips, then raise the weights through your shoulders and overhead. Lower and repeat for 60 seconds.

2. Side Lunge and Row
Minute: 1:00-2:00
Targets back, butt, legs
Stand with feet shoulder-width apart, holding a pair of 5-pound dumbbells at your sides. Take a big step out to the right with your right foot, bending right knee 90 degrees while keeping left leg straight. Draw your left elbow straight up, keeping arm close to side and butt tight. Return to start and repeat for 30 seconds; switch sides.

3. Pli� Squat and Biceps Curl
Minute: 2:00-3:00
Targets biceps, butt, inner thighs
Stand with feet shoulder-width apart and toes pointed out, holding a 5-pound dumbbell in each hand with arms extended, palms up. Bend knees 90 degrees, squatting as you curl weights toward your shoulders. Return to start and repeat for 60 seconds.

Minute: 3:00-4:00
Targets shoulders, chest, triceps, abs, back
Begin in full push-up position, palms on floor under shoulders and legs extended. Do one push-up, then carefully lift your left hand off the floor, extending your arm out to side. Holding here, lift your right foot off the floor. Lower hand and foot to floor. Do another push-up and repeat with opposite hand and foot. Continue, alternating sides.

5. Single-Leg Deadlift with Kick-Back
Minute: 4:00-5:00
Targets triceps, back, legs
Stand with feet hip-width apart, holding 5-pound dumbbells with elbows bent 90 degrees, hands close to your rib cage. Lift your left foot behind you and bend forward slowly from the hips as you straighten your arms, bringing them next to your hips. Return to starting position. Repeat for 30 seconds; switch sides and repeat.

Originally published in FITNESS magazine, December 2006.

Makes: 4 servings
Prep time: 20 minutes
Cook time: 12 minutes
Ingredients
1 ounce Neufchatel cheese
8 whole wheat bread sticks
2 tablespoons chopped chives
1 pound asparagus, trimmed
4 5-ounce salmon fillets
3/4 teaspoon salt
Nonstick cooking spray
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon lemon juice
6 cups mixed greens
1 cup red seedless grapes, halved
Directions
1. Microwave the Neufchatel in a bowl until just warm, about 10 seconds; stir until smooth. Roll one end of each bread stick in the cheese and sprinkle with chives. Set aside.
2. Add 1 inch water to a skillet and bring to a boil. Add the asparagus and cook until crisp-tender, about 3 minutes. Drain; run under cold water. Cut into bite-size pieces.
3. Sprinkle the salmon with 1/2 teaspoon of the salt. Coat a grill pan with cooking spray. Add salmon and cook over medium-high heat 4 minutes per side.
4. Whisk together the olive oil, lemon juice, and remaining salt. Combine the greens, grapes, and asparagus; toss with 2 tablespoons of the dressing. Drizzle remaining dressing over the warm salmon.
5. Divide the salad among four plates; top each plate with a salmon fillet and two bread sticks.

Provided by: http://www.fitnessmagazine.com

ROCHESTER, N.Y., May 21 (UPI) — Cancer survivors who tried four weeks of gentle yoga improved the quality of their sleep and were not as tired during the day, researchers in New York said.

They also used fewer sleeping pills and rated their quality of life more highly than cancer survivors who didn’t take yoga, said researcher Karen Mustian of the University of Rochester Cancer Center.

Researchers randomly assigned 410 patients to receive either their usual follow-up care after medical treatments or attend a 75-minute yoga class, twice a week. The average age of the patient was 54 and about three-quarters of the group had been treated for breast cancer.

After four weeks, thehttp://www.upi.comsurvivors who took yoga reported fewer sleep problems and less fatigue.

It was not clear whether more strenuous forms of yoga would provide the same results, said Mustian, who is to present her findings at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting in Chicago next month.

Provided By: http://www.upi.com

Findings may lead to earlier detection and personalized therapy, researchers say.
TUESDAY, May 18 (HealthDay News) –A specific grouping of three markers on the surface of breast cancer cells has been linked to a particularly aggressive, but relatively rare form of cancer called “estrogen receptor-negative” cancer, new research reveals.

The finding is considered to be preliminary but the identification of these markers — labelled XIC — could be important because this form of cancer is particularly difficult to treat, the study team notes.

“We are excited but cautious at the prospect that the presence of the XIC markers on [these types of] breast cancer cells may present a selective target for early detection imaging and for personalized therapy,” Barbara K. Vonderhaar, scientist emeritus of the Mammary Biology and Tumorigenesis Laboratory at the National Cancer Institute, explained in a news release.

Vonderhaar and her colleagues report the finding in the May 18th online issue of Cancer Research.

No specific therapies exist that can directly target this type of tumor, the authors note. That means the only means of treatment currently available is generalized chemotherapy, which can kill healthy cells as well as tumor cells and thereby render the option intolerable for some patients.

Vonderhaar and her colleagues were able to isolate the XIC marker cells by testing human breast cancer cells taken from four different patients. They observed that such cells had the ability to form tumors after being injected into the mammary glands of immune-compromised mice.

The research team found that estrogen receptor-negative cancer was present when the three particular markers they uncovered were all present simultaneously.

Down the road, the authors hope to determine whether or not the same XIC marker combination might also similarly identify the more easily treatable estrogen receptor-positive form of breast cancer.

More information

For more on breast cancer, visit Breast Cancer.org.

– Alan Mozes

SOURCE: Cancer Research, May 14, 2010, news release

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

From: http://www.businessweek.com

Phytochemicals in Pomegranates Stop Growth of Breast Cancer Tumors in Study
By Jennifer Warner
WebMD Health News Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
Jan. 5, 2010 — Eating pomegranates or drinking pomegranate juice may help prevent and slow the growth of some types of breast cancer.

A new study shows a group of phytochemicals called ellagitannins found in abundance in pomegranates inhibited the growth of estrogen-responsive breast cancer in laboratory tests.

“Phytochemicals suppress estrogen production that prevents the proliferation of breast cancer cells and the growth of estrogen-responsive tumors,” researcher Shiuan Chen, PhD, director of the Division of Tumor Cell Biology and co-leader of the Breast Cancer Research Program at City of Hope in Duarte, Calif., says in a news release.

Researchers say the ellagitannins in pomegranates work by inhibiting aromatase, which is a key enzyme used by the body to make estrogen and plays a key role in breast cancer growth.

“We were surprised by our findings,” Chen says. “We previously found other fruits, such as grapes, to be capable of the inhibition of aromatase. But phytochemicals in pomegranates and in grapes are different.”

Researchers say pomegranates have recently been hailed for their potential anti-cancer and heart healthy benefits thanks to their high antioxidant content. But they say this is the first study to look at their effects on aromatase and breast cancer growth.

In the study, published in Cancer Prevention Research, researchers examined the impact of 10 ellagitannin-derived compounds from pomegranates on aromatase activity and breast cancer cell growth in laboratory tests.

The results showed that of those 10 compounds, urolithin B most significantly inhibited breast cancer cell growth.

Experts say further studies will be needed to determine whether eating or drinking pomegranate-derived products will have the same effect in humans, but these results are promising.

“More research on the individual components and the combination of chemicals is needed to understand the potential risks and benefits of using pomegranate juice or isolated compounds for a health benefit or for cancer prevention,” Powel Brown, MD, PhD, chairman of the clinical cancer prevention department at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, says in a news release. Brown was not associated with the study.

Until then, researchers say people may consider eating more pomegranates to protect against cancer in the breast and perhaps other tissues and organs.

Photograph provided by:http://www.costadelsol-vacationrentals.com/health-benefits-of-pomegranates.html

Study in mice suggests that component keeps stem cells from generating new tumors.
THURSDAY, May 6 (HealthDay News) — Eating broccoli just might have benefits in the fight against breast cancer.

At least in mice, a compound derived from broccoli appears to be able to kill breast cancer stem cells, which help tumors grow, according to a new study. But it’s too soon to know if the compound would work in people. And the amount tested is larger than the amount people could consume in their diet.

The compound, known as sulforaphane, “has been studied previously for its effects on cancer, but this study shows that its benefit is in inhibiting the breast cancer stem cells,” study co-author Duxin Sun, an associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Michigan College of Pharmacy, said in a university news release.

The researchers administered sulforaphane to mice with breast cancer and monitored the number of cancer stem cells in their tumors. They found that the treated mice had fewer of the cells and that they couldn’t generate new tumors. Tests on human breast cancer cells in the laboratory resulted in similar decreases in cancer stem cells, they reported.

“This research suggests a potential new treatment that could be combined with other compounds to target breast cancer stem cells,” Dr. Max S. Wicha, an oncology professor and director of the university’s Comprehensive Cancer Center, and also a study co-author, said in the news release. “Developing treatments that effectively target the cancer stem cell population is essential for improving outcomes.”

The study was published May 1 in Clinical Cancer Research.

More information

Visit the American Cancer Society for more about breast cancer.

– Randy Dotinga

SOURCE: University of Michigan, press release, May 3, 2010

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

http://www.businessweek.com

Risk Factors You Cannot Change

Gender: Being a woman is the main risk factor Age:

Risk increases as you get older Genes:

The most common cause of hereditary breast cancer is an inherited mutation in the BRCA1 and BRCA2 genes.

Family History: Mother or sister with breast cancer

Lifestyle Risk Factors

Hormone replacement therapy

2-5 alcoholic drinks a day

Being overweight or obese

Lack of exercise Factors with Uncertain Effect on Breast Cancer.

Risk High-fat diet

Cigarette smoking

Working the night shift

courtesy of the Dr. Oz show. Check out http://www.doctoroz.com/videos/breast-cancer-risk-factors

Added to Articles on Sun 11/22/2009 G

et armed with the facts about breast cancer, beginning with those that allow you to assess your own level of risk. There are 3 categories of risk factors linked to breast cancer. Make note of these categories and which apply to you in order to make the best possible choices for your breast health.

SEATTLE — Sept. 9, 2003 — Increased physical activity, even when begun later in life, reduces overall breast-cancer risk by 20 percent among women at all levels of risk for the disease, according to a study led by researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. Their findings appear in the Sept. 10 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

What’s more, the activity need not be strenuous but it should be done consistently, such as taking a brisk, 30-minute walk five days a week, said lead investigator Anne McTiernan, M.D., Ph.D., a member of Fred Hutchinson’s Public Health Sciences Division and director of the center’s Prevention Center.

“We thought it was important to determine if moderate-intensity physical activities, such as walking, biking outdoors or easy swimming, when initiated later in life, can reduce the risk of breast cancer, since these types of activities are achievable for most women,” said McTiernan, who is also the lead author of “Breast Fitness: An Optimal Exercise and Health Plan for Reducing Your Risk of Breast Cancer” (St. Martin’s/Griffin Trade Paperback).

“Our results suggest that indeed, moderate activity, even when started in a woman’s postmenopausal years, can cut her risk of breast cancer by about 20 percent, suggesting that physical inactivity may be a modifiable breast-cancer risk factor in older women.” In addition, the researchers found that regular exercise also causes a similar reduction in overall breast-cancer incidence among women considered to be at highest risk for the disease, such as those with a strong family history of breast cancer, those who’ve never had children and those who take combination estrogen/progestin hormone-replacement therapy.

“The good news is that even though HRT increases the risk of breast cancer, exercise is something women can do to lower this risk if they choose to continue taking HRT to manage the symptoms of menopause or to prevent osteoporosis,” McTiernan said.

McTiernan and colleagues also found that the less a woman weighs, the more regular, moderate exercise appears to have a protective effect. Women of low to normal weight — and even those who were moderately overweight — who exercised the equivalent of 10 hours of walking each week experienced breast-cancer risk reductions of more than 30 percent. Breast-cancer risk didn’t budge, however, among women exercisers who were significantly overweight or obese.

The weight status of the participants was determined by calculating their body-mass index, or BMI, a measure of body fat based on height and weight. The World Health Organization divides BMI into the following categories for both men and women: underweight (18.5 or lower), normal (18.5 to 24.9), overweight (25 to 29.9) and obese (30 or greater). A BMI calculator is available on the National Institutes of Health Web site at http://nhlbisupport.com/bmi/.

“This finding certainly shouldn’t be an exercise disincentive for obese women,” McTiernan cautioned. “There are many benefits for women of any weight to start exercising, like reducing their risk of heart disease and diabetes. But in terms of breast-cancer risk, obese women will see most benefit once they start getting their weight down.”

Weight plays a role in breast cancer, researchers believe, because fatty tissue produces hormones and growth factors, such as estrogen and insulin, which may promote cancer development.

“We think that exercise works to lower cancer risk by lowering body fat, which in turn lowers the levels of circulating cancer-promoting hormones. So even if a woman is exercising, if she’s overeating and her body fat stays high, she’s not going to get the same cancer-fighting protection as a woman with less body fat.”

The best fat-burning formula involves low- to moderate-intensity exercise that is done over a longer period as opposed to short, intense bursts of activity, McTiernan said. “The bottom line is that duration of activity is more important than intensity. The turtle beats the hare when it comes to preventing breast cancer through exercise.”

To get the optimum breast-cancer protection, women should aim for at least 30 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise a day, five days a week, she said, stressing that sedentary women should start gradually and work their way up to the recommended minimum activity level.

“For most, walking is probably going to be the easiest thing to do because it doesn’t require training or special equipment, just a good pair of shoes. The main thing is for women to just get out there and do it, and make it something they enjoy,” said McTiernan, also a research professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine and School of Public Health and Community Medicine.

Investigators from the University of Washington, University of South Carolina, Howard University, University of Massachusetts and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention collaborated on the study, which was funded by the National Institutes of Health.

The study involved an ethnically and racially diverse group of more than 74,000 postmenopausal women nationwide; 15 percent of participants were minorities. In comparing whites and African-Americans, the study’s two largest racial groups, the researchers found both groups benefited equally regarding the impact of exercise on breast-cancer prevention.

The study participants were part of the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study, an arm of WHI that is following women over time to identify predictors of disease. The women were tracked for nearly five years to examine the association between current and past recreational physical activity and the incidence of breast cancer.

The women, recruited through 40 WHI clinic sites nationwide, were surveyed about their exercise history at ages 18, 35 and 50, as well as their level of physical activity when they enrolled in the study (between ages 50 and 79).

“When we looked at the women’s total activity throughout their adulthood, including light, moderate and strenuous exercise, and added it all together, those with the highest total amount of activity seemed to be the most protected. It wasn’t necessarily important regarding how much of that activity was strenuous,” said McTiernan, a WHI co-investigator who directs clinical-outcomes efforts at the WHI Clinical Coordinating Center, which is based at Fred Hutchinson.

WHI, one of the largest prevention studies ever conducted in the United States, focuses on prevention strategies for heart disease, osteoporosis, and breast and colorectal cancer in postmenopausal women. Established in 1991 by the NIH, final results are expected in 2005.

Media Contact
Kristen Woodward
(206) 667-5095
kwoodwar@fhcrc.org

# # #

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
The Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, home of two Nobel Prize laureates, is an independent, nonprofit research institution dedicated to the development and advancement of biomedical technology to eliminate cancer and other potentially fatal diseases. Fred Hutchinson receives more funding from the National Institutes of Health than any other independent U.S. research center. Recognized internationally for its pioneering work in bone-marrow transplantation, the center’s four scientific divisions collaborate to form a unique environment for conducting basic and applied science. Fred Hutchinson, in collaboration with its clinical and research partners, the University of Washington Academic Medical Center and Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical Center, is the only National Cancer Institute-designated comprehensive cancer center in the Pacific Northwest and is one of 38 nationwide. For more information, visit the center’s Web site at www.fhcrc.org.

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N. PO Box 19024 Seattle, WA 98109
©2009 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, a nonprofit organization.
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Elite Medical Skin & Laser Center has partnered with The Breast Cancer Charities of America for the month of May. Along with excepting donations throughout the month, Elite is having a special on Botox. Thursday 5/13/10 and Thursday 5/27/10, Botox will be $10 per unit. $.20 of every unit sold will be donated to The Breast Cancer Charities of America. Schedule your appointment today for these great specials and help us in our search for the cure!

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Spring, TX 77386
281-214-7777

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